Judah Ibn Quraysh has written:
'Igeret' -- subject(s): Semitic philology
''Igeret rabi Yehudah ben Kuresh' -- subject(s): Bible, Comparative Grammar, Hebrew language, Semitic languages, Textual Criticism
Ibn Ishaq's most famous work is the Sirat Rasul Allah, a biography of Prophet Muhammad. It is considered one of the earliest surviving and most important biographies of the Prophet in Islamic literature.
unayn ibn Isq al-Ibd has written:
'Musare ha-filosofim'
Ibn Hodeil has written:
'La Parure des cavaliers et l'insigne des preux' -- subject(s): Texts and translations, Arabic language
Sulaymn ibn Dwd aylis has written:
'Musnad Ab Dd al-aylis'
'Ali ibn Munjib Ibn al-Sayrafi has written:
'Al- Isharah ila man nala al-wizarah' -- subject(s): Fatimites, History
No.
i mean it isq a kind of
It means: In Status Quo= no significant changes in physical or mental state.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern -ISQ--S. That is, seven letter words with 2nd letter I and 3rd letter S and 4th letter Q and 7th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: bisques risques
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern -ISQ-E. That is, six letter words with 2nd letter I and 3rd letter S and 4th letter Q and 6th letter E. In alphabetical order, they are: bisque risque
The amount of heat energy (q) gained or lost by a substance is equal to the mass of the substance (m) multiplied by its specific heat capacity (Cg) multiplied by the change in temperature (final temperature - initial temperature) q = m x Cg x (Tf - Ti)q is what we are finding.m of coal = 5 kgCg of coal (anthracite) = 1.38 kJ/kg-K (kilojoules per kilogram-Kelvin)Tf = 220 °C.Ti = 20 °C.using the data above.q = m x Cg x (Tf - Ti)q = 5 x 1.38 x (220 - 20) -- temperature change same in K or °Cq = 5 x 1.38 x 200q = 1380 kilo-joules(kj) or 1.3 x 106 joules---The formula isQ=m*c*(T2-T1)Energy=mass*specific heat capacity*( temperature higher - temperature lower)(assuming the volume of your substance doesn't change during the heating)Energy Required = Mass x "Specific Heat Capacity" x Temperature changeFor anthracite coal, the specific heat is 1.38 kJ / kgK , yielding E = 1.38 (5kg)(200K) = 1380 kJ.